Worldviews on Death & Dying
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12th - 17th OCTOBER 2018 Memento Mori: Worldviews on Death &Dying Death on Worldviews EUROPEAN SCHOOL OF THEOSOPHY OF EUROPEAN SCHOOL boutthe European School of Theosophy The European School of Theosophy was launched in England in A October 1982 by Geoffrey Farthing, Ianthe Hoskins and Adam Warcup. Its activities are characterised by a five day programme of intensive study. The main focus of the School is the research and investigation of the early literature giving rise to the contemporary Theosophical Movement such as HPB’s writings, The Mahatma Letters and more, as well as current developments within the field of humanities and science. Subjects related to Western Esotericism, religions, Eastern and Western philosophies are also often blended into the programme. Opportunity for research projects may be given to bona fide fellows presenting a comprehensive proposal and justification of their aims. The language of the School is necessarily English, its location varies each year but always places that facilitate opportunities to commune with nature, physical activities as well as contemplation and meditation. Since its inauguration in England, the School has met in Austria, Germany, Holland, Spain, Greece, Italy, Hungary, Belgium, Holland, Israel, Scotland and Wales. The School is autonomous and is not part of any organization, Theosophical or otherwise. ur journey begins... ...in Pescia, a small town in Tuscany close to Florence. Our venue is a 17th- Ocentury building located on wonderful green hills crossed by the Pescia River. For 5 days in this idyllic place we will study and discuss the theme Memento Mori: Worldviews on Death & Dying. Memento Mori, from Latin, ‘Remember you will Die’ is a notion, with its roots in classical philosophy, which influenced the Medieval-Christian tradition shaping much of their monastic ethic. Within a larger context, Memento Mori is emphasised in both Buddhist and Stoic traditions in practices such as meditation or contemplation on death and the good life. The importance of Memento Mori for our society today will be emphasised throughout our study sessions, which will investigate the worldview on ‘death and dying’ in the writings of HPB and the Mahatma Letters, explore practices of dying and the good death in different religious traditions such as Buddhism and that of Ancient Egypt. Ultimately the School this year aims at not only equipping the student with a more in depth-view on death and dying, but most importantly also to equip the student with practical tools to face challenging situations such as death, dying and mourning. With the Kind Support of THE BLAVATSKY TRUST ransition From Death to Rebirth T William Wilson Quinn PhD Part I: The Tibetan Bardo Thödol The Bardo Thödol, widely known in the West as The Tibetan Book of the Dead, is a text or tantra in the Tibetan language that dates to the 7th century C.E. In fact, the Bardo Thödol is but one in a cycle of twelve texts that deal with the subject of dying and death–and of living incarnate in samsara (physical world of suffering through repeated deaths and rebirths). It is, however, arguably the text most useful to the most people who need guidance at the time of death and immediately thereafter to attain liberation from samsara, the wheel of death and rebirth, or failing liberation, to choose a womb for rebirth that will allow the best opportunity to continue on a spiritual path whose goal is liberation, or Buddhahood. To achieve these objectives, the text of the Bardo Thödol, which title is translated into English as “The Great Liberation by Hearing,” is read aloud to the dying or recently deceased person for 49 days following death to ensure that one of these two preferred outcomes is achieved. The Bardo Thödol is divided into 3 subsequent bardos: the chikhai bardo or “bardo of the moment of death,” which features the experience of the “clear light of reality;” the chonyid bardo or “bardo of the experiencing of reality,” which features the experience of visions of various Buddha forms as peaceful and wrathful deities; and the sidpa bardo or “bardo of rebirth or becoming,” which deals first with seeking to obstruct womb entrances followed by seeking to select the best option for rebirth. Each of these three bardos is discussed in detail and the entire transition from death to rebirth–or liberation–in these intermediate states is summarized in preparation for comparison with and identifying correspondences to the same transition as discussed by H.P. Blavatsky and, perhaps more importantly, her Teachers. Part II: The Doctrine of H.P.B. and Her Teachers The Bardo Thödol is couched entirely in the sacred between death and rebirth–and may last from a few years to a terminology and iconography of Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism. kalpa. It is divided into three sub-periods....” As described by the text, all of the vizualizations appearing In this and other letters, Koot Hoomi provides detailed to the deceased as natural projections of his or her surviving teachings and observation about the transition from death psyche are drawn from the colorful and vivid Vajrayana to rebirth that track elements of the principles found in the pantheon of Buddha beings and their consorts and assistants. Bardo Thödol, but without the many references to peaceful and Yet, as unique in the literature of thanatology, or perhaps wrathful deities that are the simulacra of Vajrayana Buddhism eschatology, as the Bardo Thödol may be, it nonetheless describes found in that text. The fundamentals of the two descriptions of in Buddhist terms a process that is universal, since everyone dying and the post-mortem transition–that of the Bardo Thödol dies, including those who have never heard of Buddhism nor and those of Koot Hoomi and also H.P. Blavatsky–contain seen any sacred Tibetan iconography. One account of the Bardo meaningful correspondences. The resulting comparison of the Thödol that excludes its denominational (Vajrayana Buddhist) two approaches yields positive results in terms of a single and expressions in favor of universal expressions was, significantly, universalized understanding the process of dying, death, and written 45 years prior to the first English translation made in rebirth extended to cover human beings of every culture and 1927 by W.Y. Evans-Wentz. In an 1882 letter to A.P. Sinnett from religion worldwide. the Adept Koot Hoomi, he states that “‘Bardo’ is the period William W. Quinn is an a guest lecturer at several universities and has appeared on Who is Who? alumnus of the University the faculty of numerous seminars and workshops in all these of Arizona (B.A. 1970 in subject areas. Literature and Writing). In 1978 he earned the degree of M.A. From 1982 to 1987, Mr. Quinn was an ethnohistorian for the in Religious Studies from the University of Chicago’s Divinity Bureau of Indian Affairs, applying his training in tribal religion School, where he was a protégé of Prof. Mircea Eliade, and to anthropological and ethnohistorical inquiries into American thereafter earned the Ph.D. (1981) from the University of Indian groups seeking Federal acknowledgment. Following Chicago’s Humanities Division in the philosophia perennis. law school, Mr. Quinn was in private practice for over ten In 1989 he earned the degree of J.D. from Arizona State years in Phoenix, specializing in Federal Indian law, first as a University, College of Law. partner in the firm of Shea & Wilks and later as Of Counsel in From 1973 to 1978 Mr. Quinn was employed by the the firm of Snell & Wilmer. Theosophical Society in America, which he joined in the year For the last six years of his legal career, Mr. Quinn was 1969. He was first the Assistant Editor and thereafter the the Field Solicitor for the Office of the Solicitor, Phoenix Editor of The American Theosophist and Quest magazine, Office, in the Department of the Interior. In that position, he and an Associate Editor of the Theosophical Publishing represented various bureaus and services of the Department House in Wheaton. Since his first publication in The American in Arizona and throughout the American Southwest, including Theosophist in 1971, he has published two books–one the Bureau of Indian Affairs. In his years as both a Federal being his doctoral dissertation titled The Only Tradition–and attorney and as a tribal attorney representing federally numerous articles on comparative religion, spirituality, and recognized Indian tribes and Indian people, he appeared in metaphysics, as well as articles on American Indian history, virtually every level of judicial forum of the State of Arizona culture, and law in national academic journals and law reviews. and courts of the United States. He has been both a lecturer for the Theosophical Society and iving in the Light of Death: L Practices for Dying April Hejka-Ekins, PhD “If you are mindful of death, it will not come as a surprise—you will not be anxious. You will feel that death is merely like changing clothes…. Consequently, at that point you will be able to maintain your calmness of mind.” Dalai Lama All of us who are devoted to Theosophy have an appreciation for the essential teachings on the oneness of all being, cycles, evolution, karma, reincarnation, the ethic of altruism, the human constitution and the after death states. However, it is one thing to develop a working knowledge of these teachings and quite another to develop a deep understanding of their meaning as they apply to us individually. The purpose of this workshop to explore our own readiness to face the reality of our own death on the levels of body, soul and spirit. Based primarily on Buddhist sources. we will combine reflective inquiry, exercises and dialog to look deeply into the process of dying, and how we can cultivate a peaceful mind by letting go of yearning, attachments and entering into an undistracted state of clear awareness that each of us can maintain at the threshold of our earthly transition to the next stage of our spiritual journey.